A
Tree of Hope For Haiti
By
Natacha Alexandre & Rene Devis, Heritagekonpa Magazine
Ayiti
Quisqueya or Bohio, as named by the indigenous peoples (the Tainos, the Xaraguas,
the Guacanagarics, the Mariens, and the Maguanas), was the first Spanish Colony
and the second-largest Caribbean island after Cuba with a lush and welcoming island
paradise when Christopher Columbus and the Spanish uncovered the island on December
5, 1492.
Five
hundred and fourteen years after European and Western colonization, Haiti is
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Massive
trees planting in Port De Paix by Haitian school children. "A Tree of Hope
For Haiti" funded by Artists Relief Fund For Haiti, L’organization Du Nord
Ouest Pour Le Developpment De L’environnement, and Heritage Konpa. Become a Sponsor
and help make a difference today . Click
for more information |
said
to be one of the most impoverished and environmentally deprived countries in the
world. After its independence from France in 1804, Haiti spent nearly 100
years paying retribution and independence debt to France, thereby exporting and
ultimately depleting lumbers and resources. It is estimated that since the Slave
Rebellion of Haiti from 1795 to 1904, the benefit from Haiti's land exploitation
has been more than US$28 billion dollars.
Within
two hundred and two years of paying retribution to the French, Haiti's future
was threatened by severe and widespread environmental degradation as a majority
of its population depends on farmlands to feed their families.
Haiti
is on the verge of a serious ecological disaster as more than 95% of its forests
are gone, fertile soils and farmlands have been destroyed and the mountains are
now reduced to bedrock. The situation will continue to get worse as long as charcoal
and low productivity agriculture are the only opportunities for poor farmers. Today
new measures and laws are needed to respond to environmental harm.
Haiti's
unstable political environment, its social impact and the lack of economic development
that the country has endured over the four decades, has forced Haitian farmers
to turn to tree cutting to be used for the production of charcoal, as an alternative
source of income.
An
overwhelming majority of the Haitian population relies heavily on the production
of charcoal as a source of energy. The land has been depleted of its most vital
resource, trees, and subsistence farmers through soil depletion; deforestation,
erosion, and destruction of fertile and grazing lands have caused farmers to abandon
the land. The environmental degradation of Haiti's land must be stopped now. Farmers
must be encouraged to replant, as reforestation is key in revamping the land.
According
to recent data from mongabay.com,
only "3.8% of Haiti’s 105,000 hectares of land is forested. Furthermore,
Haiti has lost 22.1% of its forest and woodland habitat from 1990-2005."
Deforestation of Haiti's lands and mountain through industrial clear-cutting or
by local farmers has already claimed over two-third of the forests of Tibet to
feed Haiti's enormous demand for charcoals.. 1 |2|Next
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Some
of the long term projects we are working on are:
1.
Providing portable water for communities throughout Haiti.
2. Building low
income housing units in the provinces to help resolve the problem of over population
in metropolitan areas
3. Donating trees and grains to farmers to plant to help
solve the ecological and economic problems.
4. Musical schools, sports attractions
and many more other program that will help rebuild tourism once again.
All
who are interested in joining our mission is required to do so in writing. Please
use the information below to contact us, it is preferred to do so via e mail,
and we will contact you.
|
A.R.F.H.
Rene
Devis, Heritagekonpa Magazine
phone: 917-853-3746 |
A.R.F.H.
Muller
Noel, Heritagekonpa Magazine
phone: 646-281-0112 |
|
A.R.F.H.
Marc
Antione Jacques
email: nepohaiti@yahoo.com
phone: | Artist
Relief Funds For Haiti. P.O
Box 1362
Valley Stream, NY |